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2021 Full Cities Dataset for Excel - North America
This is a filtered view based on 2021 Full Cities Dataset.
| Row number | Questionnaire | Year Reported to CDP | Account Number | Organization | Country | CDP Region | Parent Section | Section | Question Number | Question Name | Column Number | Column Name | Row Number | Row Name | Response Answer | Comments | File Name | Last update |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 161151 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 58357 | City of West Hollywood, CA | United States of America | North America | 8. Energy | 8.5 | How many households within the municipal boundary face energy poverty? Please select the threshold used for energy poverty in your city. | 1 | Number of households within the city boundary that face energy poverty | 1 | Energy Poverty | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||||
| 161152 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 37241 | City of Berkeley, CA | United States of America | North America | 5. Emissions Reduction | Mitigation Target setting | 5.0c | Please provide details of your total city-wide base year intensity target. An intensity target is usually measured per capita or per unit GDP. If you have an absolute emissions reduction target, please select “Base year emissions (absolute) target” in question 5.0. | 10 | Percentage reduction target in emissions intensity | 0 | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 161153 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 3203 | City of Chicago, IL | United States of America | North America | 2. Climate Hazards and Vulnerability | Climate Hazards | 2.1 | Please list the most significant climate hazards faced by your city and indicate the probability and consequence of these hazards, as well as the expected future change in frequency and intensity. Please also select the most relevant assets or services that are affected by the climate hazard and provide a description of the impact. | 12 | Please describe the impacts experienced so far, and how you expect the hazard to impact in the future | 4 | The most frequent impacts from flooding are basement groundwater infiltration, sewer back-ups, and road flooding. CSO outfall releases during major storms also significantly impact water quality and ecosystem stability. The City notes the disproportionate burden on low-income and BIPOC communities in terms of flooding damage and severity. | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 161154 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 832838 | Town of Wellfleet, MA | United States of America | North America | 4. City-wide Emissions | City-wide GHG Emissions Data | 4.5 | Please attach your city-wide inventory in Excel or other spreadsheet format and provide additional details on the inventory calculation methods in the table below. | 8 | Overall level of confidence | 1 | High | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 161155 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 16581 | City of Seattle, WA | United States of America | North America | 5. Emissions Reduction | Mitigation Actions | 5.4 | Describe the anticipated outcomes of the most impactful mitigation actions your city is currently undertaking; the total cost of the action and how much is being funded by the local government. | 19 | Name of the stakeholder group | 5 | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 161156 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 31108 | City of Houston, TX | United States of America | North America | 4. City-wide Emissions | GCoM Emission Factor and Activity Data | 4.14a | Please provide a summary of emissions factors and activity data used in your inventory. | 5 | Gas | 5 | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 161157 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 35393 | City of St Louis, MO | United States of America | North America | 5. Emissions Reduction | Mitigation Planning | 5.5a | Please attach your city’s climate change mitigation plan below. If your city has both mitigation and energy access plans, please make sure to attach all relevant documents below. | 5 | Areas covered by action plan | 1 | Waste | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 161158 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 59707 | Town of Princeton, NJ | United States of America | North America | 1. Governance and Data Management | Governance | 1.3 | Please list the key development challenges, barriers and opportunities within the GCC Program. | 2 | Please describe the selected development, challenge, barrier or opportunity | 0 | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 161159 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 59653 | City of Manhattan Beach, CA | United States of America | North America | 3. Adaptation | Adaptation Actions | 3.0 | Please describe the main actions you are taking to reduce the risk to, and vulnerability of, your city’s infrastructure, services, citizens, and businesses from climate change as identified in the Climate Hazards section. | 12 | Total cost provided by the local government (currency) | 1 | 200000 | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 161160 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 53829 | City of Kingston, ON | Canada | North America | 2. Climate Hazards and Vulnerability | Climate Hazards | 2.1 | Please list the most significant climate hazards faced by your city and indicate the probability and consequence of these hazards, as well as the expected future change in frequency and intensity. Please also select the most relevant assets or services that are affected by the climate hazard and provide a description of the impact. | 3 | Current probability of hazard | 2 | High | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 161161 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 64014 | City of Cupertino, CA | United States of America | North America | 4. City-wide Emissions | City-wide GHG Emissions Data | 4.6a | The Global Covenant of Mayors requires committed cities to report their inventories in the format of the new Common Reporting Framework, to encourage standard reporting of emissions data. Please provide a breakdown of your city-wide emissions by sector and sub-sector in the table below. Where emissions data is not available, please use the relevant notation keys to explain the reason why. | 1 | Direct emissions (metric tonnes CO2e) | 6 | Stationary energy > Fugitive emissions | 3130 | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||
| 161162 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 35268 | City of Boston, MA | United States of America | North America | 6. Opportunities | Finance and Economic Opportunities | 6.5 | List any mitigation, adaptation, water related or resilience projects you have planned within your city for which you hope to attract financing and provide details on the estimated costs and status of the project. If your city does not have any relevant projects, please select 'No relevant projects' under 'Project Area'. | 2 | Project title | 2 | Climate Ready South Boston implementation | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 161163 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 74575 | Dane County, WI | United States of America | North America | 5. Emissions Reduction | Mitigation Actions | 5.4 | Describe the anticipated outcomes of the most impactful mitigation actions your city is currently undertaking; the total cost of the action and how much is being funded by the local government. | 11 | Co-benefit area | 5 | Greening the economy | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 161164 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 35883 | City of San José, CA | United States of America | North America | 4. City-wide Emissions | GCoM Emission Factor and Activity Data | 4.14a | Please provide a summary of emissions factors and activity data used in your inventory. | 6 | Emission factor value | 10 | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 161165 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 50558 | City of London, ON | Canada | North America | 4. City-wide Emissions | City-wide GHG Emissions Data | 4.6a | The Global Covenant of Mayors requires committed cities to report their inventories in the format of the new Common Reporting Framework, to encourage standard reporting of emissions data. Please provide a breakdown of your city-wide emissions by sector and sub-sector in the table below. Where emissions data is not available, please use the relevant notation keys to explain the reason why. | 3 | Indirect emissions from the use of grid-supplied electricity, heat, steam and/or cooling (metric tonnes CO2e) | 2 | Stationary energy > Commercial buildings & facilities | 65000 | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||
| 161166 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 43905 | City of San Antonio, TX | United States of America | North America | 3. Adaptation | Adaptation Planning | 3.2a | Please provide more information on your plan that addresses climate change adaptation and/or resilience and attach the document. Please provide details on the boundary of your plan, and where this differs from your city’s boundary, please provide an explanation. | 13 | Description of the stakeholder engagement processes | 1 | The Office of Sustainability worked with six technical working groups-totaling 90 people-and met monthly for 10 months. The Climate Equity technical working group met for almost two years.The feedback from the public and the list of events are included below.https://www.sanantonio.gov/Portals/0/Files/Sustainability/SAClimateReady/PublicFeedbackSummary.pdfhttps://www.sanantonio.gov/Portals/0/Files/Sustainability/SAClimateReady/GeographicEngagementSummary.pdf | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 161167 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 16581 | City of Seattle, WA | United States of America | North America | 5. Emissions Reduction | Mitigation Actions | 5.4 | Describe the anticipated outcomes of the most impactful mitigation actions your city is currently undertaking; the total cost of the action and how much is being funded by the local government. | 12 | Action description and implementation progress | 7 | Adopted in 2010, Seattle's Energy Benchmarking Program (SMC 22.920) requires owners of nonresidential and multi-family buildings (20,000 square feet or larger) to track energy performance and annually report to the City. The policy was updated in 2016 to make reported data publicly available to further increase awareness of building energy use and support real estate market transformation. It is estimated that Seattle’s benchmarked buildings represent about two-thirds of citywide commercial and industrial square footage. The Benchmarking and Transparency policy is foundational to reducing energy use and GHG emissions – raising the awareness of energy consumption among building owners and managers enables opportunities to reduce energy use and save money. The data also helps the City track overall building energy use and emissions while informing energy efficiency policy and program development. Program staff assist building owners with compliance, ensure data quality is high, and connect customers to rebates and technical assistance. Seattle has an industry leading compliance rate of 99 percent each of the past four years. Since 2014, buildings benchmarking three consecutive years have demonstrated a 2.7 percent decrease in energy use | The projected emissions reductions from new strategies can be found in the 2018 Climate Action document: http://durkan.seattle.gov/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/SeaClimateAction_April2018.pdf | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||
| 161168 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 14874 | City of Portland, OR | United States of America | North America | 5. Emissions Reduction | Mitigation Actions | 5.4 | Describe the anticipated outcomes of the most impactful mitigation actions your city is currently undertaking; the total cost of the action and how much is being funded by the local government. | 5 | Start year of action | 2 | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||||
| 161169 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 3203 | City of Chicago, IL | United States of America | North America | 3. Adaptation | Adaptation Actions | 3.0 | Please describe the main actions you are taking to reduce the risk to, and vulnerability of, your city’s infrastructure, services, citizens, and businesses from climate change as identified in the Climate Hazards section. | 7 | Sectors/areas adaptation action applies to | 4 | Building and Infrastructure | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 161170 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 841965 | City of Lansing, MI | United States of America | North America | 9. Buildings | 9.1 | Does your city have emissions reduction targets (government operations, city wide targets) or energy efficiency targets for the following building types? | 3 | Energy efficiency target | 4 | New buildings | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 161171 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 55801 | City of West Palm Beach, FL | United States of America | North America | 3. Adaptation | Adaptation Actions | 3.0 | Please describe the main actions you are taking to reduce the risk to, and vulnerability of, your city’s infrastructure, services, citizens, and businesses from climate change as identified in the Climate Hazards section. | 7 | Sectors/areas adaptation action applies to | 1 | Building and Infrastructure | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 161172 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 54125 | City of Boise, ID | United States of America | North America | 5. Emissions Reduction | Mitigation Actions | 5.4 | Describe the anticipated outcomes of the most impactful mitigation actions your city is currently undertaking; the total cost of the action and how much is being funded by the local government. | 11 | Co-benefit area | 5 | Improved public health | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 161173 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 53879 | City of Jersey City, NJ | United States of America | North America | 2. Climate Hazards and Vulnerability | Climate Hazards | 2.1 | Please list the most significant climate hazards faced by your city and indicate the probability and consequence of these hazards, as well as the expected future change in frequency and intensity. Please also select the most relevant assets or services that are affected by the climate hazard and provide a description of the impact. | 7 | Please identify which vulnerable populations are affected | 3 | Low-income households | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 161174 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 53959 | City of Fayetteville, AR | United States of America | North America | 4. City-wide Emissions | Historical emissions inventories | 4.13 | Please provide details on any historical, base year or recalculated city-wide emissions inventories your city has, in order to allow assessment of targets in the table below. | 6 | Methodology | 1 | U.S. Community Protocol for Accounting and Reporting of Greenhouse Gas Emissions (ICLEI) | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 161175 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 35884 | City of San Diego, CA | United States of America | North America | 10. Transport | 10.3 | Please provide the total fleet size and number of vehicle types for the following modes of transport. | 4 | Number of freight vehicles | 1 | Total fleet size | From 2020 CAP Annual Report | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 161176 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 841964 | City of Hallandale Beach, FL | United States of America | North America | 4. City-wide Emissions | City-wide GHG Emissions Data | 4.6a | The Global Covenant of Mayors requires committed cities to report their inventories in the format of the new Common Reporting Framework, to encourage standard reporting of emissions data. Please provide a breakdown of your city-wide emissions by sector and sub-sector in the table below. Where emissions data is not available, please use the relevant notation keys to explain the reason why. | 6 | If you have no emissions occurring outside the city boundary to report as a result of in-city activities, please select a notation key to explain why | 12 | Transportation > Off-road | NE | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||
| 161177 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 55799 | Arlington, VA | United States of America | North America | 10. Transport | 10.11 | Please provide city-wide average air pollution metrics from the monitoring sites within your city for the most recent three years. | 8 | Who owns the data? | 2 | PM2.5 (Maximum 24-hour average) | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 161178 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 59588 | Town of Chapel Hill, NC | United States of America | North America | 10. Transport | 10.3 | Please provide the total fleet size and number of vehicle types for the following modes of transport. | 6 | Transport Network Companies (e.g. Uber, Lyft) fleet size | 3 | Hybrid | We are taking delivery and operationalizing the 3 all-electric buses in summer of 2021. | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 161179 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 58531 | City of Somerville, MA | United States of America | North America | 10. Transport | 10.3 | Please provide the total fleet size and number of vehicle types for the following modes of transport. | 7 | Customer-drive carshares (e.g. Car2Go, Drivenow) fleet size | 2 | Electric | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||||
| 161180 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 20113 | City of Vancouver, BC | Canada | North America | 2. Climate Hazards and Vulnerability | Climate Hazards | 2.2 | Please identify and describe the factors that most greatly affect your city’s ability to adapt to climate change and indicate how those factors either support or challenge this ability. | 2 | Indicate if this factor either supports or challenges the ability to adapt | 14 | Challenges | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 161181 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 35274 | City of Portland, ME | United States of America | North America | 2. Climate Hazards and Vulnerability | Climate Hazards | 2.1 | Please list the most significant climate hazards faced by your city and indicate the probability and consequence of these hazards, as well as the expected future change in frequency and intensity. Please also select the most relevant assets or services that are affected by the climate hazard and provide a description of the impact. | 4 | Current magnitude of hazard | 6 | Medium High | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 161182 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 50401 | City of Madison, WI | United States of America | North America | 10. Transport | 10.5 | Does your city have a low or zero-emission zone or restrictions on high polluting vehicles that cover a significant part of the city? (i.e. that disincentivises fossil fuel vehicles through a charge, a ban or access restriction) | 0 | 0 | No | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||||
| 161183 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 35870 | City of Miami, FL | United States of America | North America | 6. Opportunities | Opportunities | 6.0 | Please indicate the opportunities your city has identified as a result of addressing climate change and describe how the city is positioning itself to take advantage of these opportunities. | 1 | Opportunity | 7 | Improved efficiency of municipal operations | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 161184 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 59657 | City of Beaverton, OR | United States of America | North America | 8. Energy | 8.2 | For each type of renewable energy within the city boundary, please report the installed capacity (MW) and annual generation (MWh). | 1 | Installed capacity (MW) | 5 | Bioenergy (Biomass and Biofuels) | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||||
| 161185 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 74414 | Boulder County, CO | United States of America | North America | 5. Emissions Reduction | Mitigation Actions | 5.4 | Describe the anticipated outcomes of the most impactful mitigation actions your city is currently undertaking; the total cost of the action and how much is being funded by the local government. | 17 | Total cost provided by the majority funding source (currency) | 3 | 357505 | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 161186 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 58590 | City of Easton, PA | United States of America | North America | 10. Transport | 10.11 | Please provide city-wide average air pollution metrics from the monitoring sites within your city for the most recent three years. | 6 | Frequency of measurements (e.g. hourly, daily) | 1 | PM2.5 (1 year (annual) mean) | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 161187 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 31090 | District of Columbia, DC | United States of America | North America | 5. Emissions Reduction | Mitigation Actions | 5.4 | Describe the anticipated outcomes of the most impactful mitigation actions your city is currently undertaking; the total cost of the action and how much is being funded by the local government. | 3 | Means of implementation | 1 | Financial mechanism | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 161188 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 50572 | City of Saint Paul, MN | United States of America | North America | 4. City-wide Emissions | City-wide GHG Emissions Data | 4.6a | The Global Covenant of Mayors requires committed cities to report their inventories in the format of the new Common Reporting Framework, to encourage standard reporting of emissions data. Please provide a breakdown of your city-wide emissions by sector and sub-sector in the table below. Where emissions data is not available, please use the relevant notation keys to explain the reason why. | 4 | If you have no indirect emissions to report, please select a notation key to explain why | 12 | Transportation > Off-road | NO | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||
| 161189 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 43910 | City of Columbus, OH | United States of America | North America | 4. City-wide Emissions | GCoM Emission Factor and Activity Data | 4.14a | Please provide a summary of emissions factors and activity data used in your inventory. | 5 | Gas | 8 | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 161190 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 43907 | City of Indianapolis, IN | United States of America | North America | 9. Buildings | 9.1 | Does your city have emissions reduction targets (government operations, city wide targets) or energy efficiency targets for the following building types? | 2 | Please provide more details and/or link to more information about the emission reduction target. | 5 | All building types | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 161191 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 14874 | City of Portland, OR | United States of America | North America | 4. City-wide Emissions | City-wide GHG Emissions Data | 4.6a | The Global Covenant of Mayors requires committed cities to report their inventories in the format of the new Common Reporting Framework, to encourage standard reporting of emissions data. Please provide a breakdown of your city-wide emissions by sector and sub-sector in the table below. Where emissions data is not available, please use the relevant notation keys to explain the reason why. | 3 | Indirect emissions from the use of grid-supplied electricity, heat, steam and/or cooling (metric tonnes CO2e) | 28 | Generation of grid-supplied energy > Heat/cold generation | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 161192 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 74466 | Village of South Barrington, IL | United States of America | North America | 10. Transport | 10.11 | Please provide city-wide average air pollution metrics from the monitoring sites within your city for the most recent three years. | 9 | Publicly available? | 7 | SO2 (Maximum 24-hour average) | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 161193 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 59563 | City of Takoma Park, MD | United States of America | North America | 5. Emissions Reduction | Mitigation Actions | 5.4 | Describe the anticipated outcomes of the most impactful mitigation actions your city is currently undertaking; the total cost of the action and how much is being funded by the local government. | 17 | Total cost provided by the majority funding source (currency) | 2 | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||||
| 161194 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 53921 | City of Tempe, AZ | United States of America | North America | 2. Climate Hazards and Vulnerability | Climate Hazards | 2.1 | Please list the most significant climate hazards faced by your city and indicate the probability and consequence of these hazards, as well as the expected future change in frequency and intensity. Please also select the most relevant assets or services that are affected by the climate hazard and provide a description of the impact. | 11 | When do you first expect to experience those changes in frequency and intensity? | 5 | Immediately | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 161195 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 74481 | Town of Acton, MA | United States of America | North America | 10. Transport | 10.11 | Please provide city-wide average air pollution metrics from the monitoring sites within your city for the most recent three years. | 8 | Who owns the data? | 4 | PM10 (Maximum 24-hour average) | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 161196 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 54104 | City of Boulder, CO | United States of America | North America | 3. Adaptation | Adaptation Goals | 3.3 | Please describe the main goals of your city’s adaptation efforts and the metrics / KPIs for each goal. | 7 | Comment | 3 | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||||
| 161197 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 43910 | City of Columbus, OH | United States of America | North America | 9. Buildings | 9.0 | Is your city implementing any retrofit programs addressing existing commercial, residential and/or municipal buildings? | 2 | Buildings that the program applies to | 1 | Retrofit programs | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 161198 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 59644 | City of Culver City, CA | United States of America | North America | 13. Waste | 13.6 | Does your city have any of the following initiatives, policies and/or regulations. | 2 | Please provide more details and/or a link to more information about any of the proposed initiatives/policies/regulations | 4 | Target(s) on reducing food waste to disposal (landfill and incineration) | The City is working on an Mandatory Enforcement Ordinance that includes language that residents/commercial businsses shall subscribe to the three container system. The first reading of ordinance is expected in August 2021. The City is also working on an edible food waste diversion program. The City has a refrigerated truck and will pick up edible food and deliver food to a non-profit so food is not landfilled and instead consumed. | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 161199 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 58513 | City of Medford, MA | United States of America | North America | 2. Climate Hazards and Vulnerability | Climate Risk and Vulnerability Assessment | 2.0c | Please explain why your city does not have a climate risk and vulnerability assessment. | 1 | Reason | 1 | Please explain | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||
| 161200 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 54085 | City of Savannah, GA | United States of America | North America | 6. Opportunities | Finance and Economic Opportunities | 6.11 | Does your city have its own credit rating? | 1 | Does your city have a credit rating? | 2 | Domestic | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 |
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Description
This data is collected through the CDP-ICLEI Unified Reporting System. When using this data, please cite both organisations using the following wording: ‘This data was collected in partnership by CDP and ICLEI - Local Governments for Sustainability’.
This dataset contains the full responses of publicly disclosing cities in 2021. The platform is still open and the dataset is updated daily to reflect new submissions.
To view the cities 2021 questionnaire guidance, including all questions asked to cities in 2021, visit https://www.cdp.net/en/guidance/guidance-for-cities.
For any questions, including guidance on how to reference this data in your own work, please contact cities@cdp.net.
Please note that this dataset may contain data from cities or, in some instances, groups of cities at different administrative levels. This includes metropolitan areas, combined authorities, and some regional councils.
When using the inventory data for aggregation, comparison and trend analysis, please note that the inventory data is based on non-verified self-reported city inputs. The reported inventory may not include all emission sources within the city boundary.
This dataset contains data pulled from the CDP Cities North America Authority Region.
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